Note: You must establish a session for Winter Academic Term 2002 on wolverineaccess.umich.edu in order to use the link "Check Times, Location, and Availability". Once your session is established, the links will function.

Section 001.

Instructor(s):

Methods workshop highly recommended for juniors of the REES Honors program. It is not available for general enrollment. Must be admitted by REES Honors advisor. Students who do not take it and want to write an Honors thesis their senior year must have a thesis proposal approved by both an individual advisor and the REES honor advisor before the start of the fall term their senior year.

Section 001.

Instructor(s):

Prerequisites & Distribution: REES 402 or a thesis prospectus accepted (prior to start of fall term of senior year) by REES Honors advisor and an individual thesis advisor. (1-6). (Excl). May be repeated for a total of six credits.

Credits: (1-6).

Course Homepage: No homepage submitted.

The course is required of all senior Honors concentrators in REES and is open only to them. Must be admitted by REES Honors advisor.

Instructor(s): Michele R Rivkin-Fish

Gender and health issues stand at the nexus of political-economic, social, and cultural changes in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union. This course examines the intersection of health and gender in post-socialist reform. The goals are: (1) to illuminate and understand the ways health and disease are related to broader processes of political and cultural change; and (2) to understand how the transition from state socialism to market-based democracies raises challenges for social welfare, equality, and public health.

Instructor(s): John J Hartman

Prerequisites & Distribution: (1). (Excl). Laboratory fee ($10) required. May be repeated for a total of two credits.

Mini/Short course

Credits: (1).

Lab Fee: Laboratory fee ($10) required.

Course Homepage: No homepage submitted.

The purpose of the course is to explore the nature and causes of ethnic conflict among Poles, Ukrainians, and Jews in the 20th century from the viewpoint of the psychology of large groups. Nationalism in the context of massive psychic trauma will be discussed in terms of collective memory, identity diffusion, and failure to mourn.